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http://www.bnp.org.uk/

2006-12-27 13:18:39 · 28 answers · asked by seacow 1 in Politics & Government Politics

28 answers

What and stir up trouble, hate and disorder instead of peace and harmony? Go stick your head on a railway line, and leave it there you prannock. Hitler DIDN'T have the right idea, my dad did. He and his mates kicked Hitlers' backside, and Hitler had to shoot himself in defeat, remember?
Life is short. Try enjoying it, instead of scape-goating all your short-comings onto those different from you.

2006-12-27 13:24:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 5 4

seacow, are you American? I ask because Brits would never call mathematics 'math' as you do in the Algebra thread.

If you are simply an American trolling then be aware that most BNP members are using anti-multiculturalism as a cover for the fact that they want the age of consent reduced to 10 so they can be taken off the child protection register.

2006-12-28 04:10:25 · answer #2 · answered by mickyrisk 4 · 3 2

Why don't you people say what you mean. What your really asking is for people to join the race war the Nazi British National Party are trying to stir up as a stepping stone to power. I read the speech wannabe Fuhrer Griffin gave to a gathering of far right organisations in the States earlier this year. No matter how hard you try to look respectable and electable the BNP are still Nazis whose only interest in democracy is destroying it. I for one will not be joining with you. I'll unite with others to fight against you though - and there's a lot of people out here in the real world who feel the same.

2006-12-28 00:32:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 4 4

They are not against multiculturalism

2006-12-31 10:12:11 · answer #4 · answered by anton m 3 · 0 1

The English as an ethnic group trace their heritage largely, but not exclusively to the Romano-Britons,[9] Anglo-Saxons,[10] the Danish-Vikings[11] that formed the Danelaw during the time of Alfred the Great and the Normans.[12][13] The name of England derives from the Angles.

Germanic immigrants and Roman auxiliary troops may have settled in Britain long before the departure of the legions; indeed German auxiliary troops may even have been involved in the Roman invasion of the island in the 1st Century A.D.[17]. This same process occurred in many other provinces along the Roman border with the Germani. There is no reason to assume that the process of immigration was any different to other Roman provinces, in which case there may have been a Germanic influence on indigenous culture and language long before Roman legionaries left the island.[17]
Archeological discoveries suggest that North Africans may have had a limited presence in those parts of Britain that were to become England at the time of the Roman Empire.[18][19]


[edit] Genetics
The preponderance of the R1b haplotype on the Y chromosomes of English males, at 64%[20] to 69%,[2] is thought to indicate that they are descended primarily from the earliest paleolithic peoples thought to have recolonised western Europe from a western Ice Age refuge after the end of the last major glaciation (LMG) some 10-12 thousand years ago.[21] There are thought to have been three separated pockets of human habitation in Europe during the last major glaciation (the end of the paleolithic and the Pleistocene), on the Iberian peninsula, in the Balkans and in what is now the Ukraine (north of the Black Sea). The Y chromosome haplogroups from these populations are thought to correspond to R1b (Iberian), I (Balkans) and R1a (Ukraine), these three haplogroups occur all over Europe, but their frequencies are not spread uniformly. [3][22][23]

Y chromosome analysis of men from Britain, Denmark, Ireland, Germany, Norway, Friesland and the Basque Country of Northern Spain and South Western France has revealed that the Germanic (Danish/North German/Frisian) component in the male line of descent is higher in some areas of England than others.[14] It is highest in York and Norfolk, where the Germanic Y chromosome occurs in about 60% of men, while indigenous Y chromosomes comprise about 40%.[14] The research cannot distinguish between Danish (the presumed source of Danish-Viking settlers to East and Northern England), North German (Schleswig-Holstein, modern era) and Frisian (Anglo-Saxon) Y chromosomes. It concludes these data are consistent with the presence of some indigenous component in all British regions.[14] Also, this research cannot make reference to the extent of settlement by Anglo-Saxon/Danish-Viking women. Therefore even in places like York, the total genetic contribution of these peoples would be less than 60% if fewer women than men migrated, and conversely it would be greater if more women than men settled. Computer simulations have shown that it is theoretically possible for a small Anglo-Saxon population that was politically and economically dominant to support larger families, which in turn could have resulted in a faster population growth for the dominant class. This model has been likened to apartheid in South Africa.[24] These data assume that there is a 50-100% Anglo-Saxon Y chromosome occurrence throughout England, but this assumption has previously been shown to be questionable.[14] In some areas, notably Cornwall (and to a lesser extent Cumbria), some people claim a stronger ethnic connection to the ancient Britons, consequently some historians claim that Cornish people are distinct from English people.

Since Oliver Cromwell's resettlement of the Jews in 1656, there has been a small but continuous Jewish community in England, which has produced many notable people, including the Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli.[33]

There had also been a very small black presence in England since at least the 16th century, due to the slave trade and an Indian presence since the mid-nineteenth because of the British Raj.[34] Since 1945, this proportion has grown, as immigration from the British Empire and subsequent Commonwealth of Nations was encouraged due to labour shortages during post-war rebuilding

2006-12-27 21:42:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

Absolutely. I am not English, but am sick and tired of the way that the English are treated by this inept, incompetent and corrupt government while they bend over backwards trying to please foreign nationals in this country, be it illegal immigrants, asylum seekers, terrorists, hate preachers, murderers, peado's, and the like!!!!!!!!

2006-12-29 07:36:01 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I agree with Lamm's views on multiculturalism, as it applies to the United States, so I do fight it. However, I'm not where I could do you any good except in the 'misery loves company' department.

http://www.snopes.com/politics/soapbox/lamm.asp

2006-12-27 21:23:36 · answer #7 · answered by DAR 7 · 1 3

BNP are a bunch of Nazi thugs, led by a holocaust denier.

Multiculturalism has benefitted the UK greatly, especially the food!

It's probably having to eat crap British food makes the Nazi BNP such a bunch of humourless bastards.

Sweep, take that hand out of your bum and think - they are hardly going to show their true colours on the web-site, are they? Do you think Hitler had the Holocaust as a manifesto pledge when he was first elected to power?

2006-12-27 21:28:47 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 6 4

Im a Pakistani by origin mate i wont join your fight mate you ****, England will forever be multiculral mate .

2006-12-31 02:30:53 · answer #9 · answered by HI 2 · 1 2

I have been criticising it for years, but the TV lefties have a much bigger audience together with left leaning teachers/lecturers and other acolytes; not to mention the government.

2006-12-28 07:48:37 · answer #10 · answered by Veritas 7 · 0 3

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